Conflict Studies Research Centre

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Conflict Studies Research Centre"

Transcription

1 Conflict Studies Research Centre

2 Ukraine s Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation James Sherr On Sunday 31 March, Ukraine s voters elected a parliament whose composition reflects neither the wishes of the authorities, nor their own. The fourth convocation of the Verkhovna Rada is less reformist but also less leftwing than the country s divided and regionalised electorate; presidential and oligarchic interests are substantially over-represented, but they do not dominate the parliament, and it will not be easy for them to control it. The results say more about the balance of power in Ukraine and the in-built bias of the country s constitutionally enshrined electoral system than about illegalities and irregularities in the Western sense. Although the administrative resource was employed across the country, it could not disguise the pronounced shift which has occurred since the last parliament was elected on 29 March 1998: the transformation of reformists from a regional to a national force and a sharp erosion of support for the left. This shift, rather than the actions of the authorities, is the significant fact to emerge from these elections. Aims & Results In the West, where Ukraine s largest reformist bloc, led by former Prime Minister Viktor Yushchenko ( Our Ukraine ), is widely termed pro-western and liberal and where Ukraine s President, Leonid Kuchma, once similarly described, is now described in opposite terms, the dynamics of the contest are often over-simplified. Kuchma s aims are not ideological, but more straightforward: to preserve power. This means weakening opposition, whatever its ideological stripe. For this reason, he has employed the administrative resource the use of executive power structures to achieve electoral ends as firmly against the Communists (led by Petro Symonenko) and its ideological cousin, the Socialist Party (led by Oleksandr Moroz) as against the reformists. 1 Amongst reformists, the main target was the former Deputy Prime Minister Yulia Tymoshenko, whose Motherland (Batkivshchyna) bloc has been dedicated not only to opposing the President, but (in alliance with the Socialists) to impeaching him. For his part, Viktor Yushchenko appointed Prime Minister by Kuchma in December 1999 and, prior to that, Chairman of the Central Bank has been careful not to describe his diverse bloc of 10 parties as an opposition force and has been equally careful to keep lines of communication open to the President and the Ukraine's Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation Conflict Studies Research Centre ISBN April

3 2 James Sherr forces dominating the 5-party presidential bloc, For a United Ukraine (ZaEdU). 2 The aims of the authorities were fourfold: to prevent the reformists from dominating parliament; to ensure a pivotal, if not dominant role for ZaEdU, in alliance with Viktor Medvedchuk s United Social Democratic Party (USDP) and Volodymyr Horbulin s Democratic Party-Democratic Union bloc; to weaken the Communist Party and strengthen its opportunistic instincts; to keep Tymoshenko s Batkivshchyna and Moroz s Socialists below the four per cent threshold required to enter parliament. In these aims, they only partially succeeded (see Annexe). That they succeeded as much as they did is due to the possibilities afforded by the country s two-tier electoral system, which elects 225 of 450 People s Deputies in first-past-the-post single-mandate constituencies, unabashedly dominated by executive power structures. In their first aim, the authorities did less well than they would have liked, although their minimal objective would have been secured even if they had let democracy take its course. On the basis of its own polling data, even Our Ukraine did not claim support by more than 27 per cent of the electorate (versus per cent officially recorded), and even when this is combined with the 7.21 per cent received by Tymoshenko, the result would not have been a reformist parliament. Nevertheless, it is significant that the clone parties created by the authorities to divert support from Yushchenko failed to score. 3 In achieving the second aim, the electoral system and the administrative resource were far more successful. Until mid March, the presidential bloc, ZaEdU, was securing only 4-7 per cent in the opinion polls. In the days before the election, this total rose to about 12 per cent, and the bloc received per cent on election day. Yet thanks to its success in single-seat constituencies, it has secured almost 20 per cent of parliamentary seats, and the support of allied parties and independents might well increase this total to 40 per cent. However, despite the wealth and influence of its respective backers, Viktor Medvedchuk s USDP (which controls two major television channels and outspent any other bloc) received fewer votes than Moroz s Socialists; and the Democratic Union-Democratic Party (led by Volodymyr Horbulin, but underwritten by Oleksandr Volkov) secured only four singlemandate seats on the basis of 0.87 per cent of the vote cast. Interestingly the Russian image technologists employed by Medvedchuk (including President Putin s image maker, Gleb Pavlovskiy) do not seem to have boosted his fortunes. In the third aim the authorities succeeded fully. The Communist Party secured per cent of the vote, but less than 12 per cent of the seats.

4 Ukraine's Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation But in the final aim they failed completely. Amongst the hard opposition, the Socialists secured 6.93 per cent of the vote (and 5.5 per cent of the seats), and Tymoshenko (7.21 per cent with 4.8 per cent of seats) actually did better than opinion polls forecast, probably because administrative pressure increased the level of her support. To add insult to injury, the most significant leftwing force to fall below four per cent, Nataliya Vytrenko s Progressive Socialist Party, is widely regarded as a creation of the President, designed to take votes from the Socialist Party. Some of these are highly skewed results by comparison with voter preferences, which, as the table in the annexe demonstrates, would have produced a rather different balance of forces. 4 Yet by comparison with the previous parliament whose election took place within a legal framework markedly less transparent than that of 2002 the change in the balance of forces is even more dramatic. 5 In 1998 the one unequivocally reformist force, Rukh, secured only 8.9 per cent of the vote (and 40 seats), concentrated in the west of the country. In the current election, Yushchenko s bloc secured a plurality of votes in 14 of the country s 24 oblasti (regions), including two bordering Russia (Chernihiv and Sumy), as well as the city of Kyiv, 6 and it along with Tymoshenko s bloc will have 135 seats in the new convocation, even if none of the 93 independents join forces with them. In marked contrast, in 1998 the Communists received 25.3 per cent of the vote and secured 115 seats (as opposed to 66 seats in 2002). Today it is they who are the regional force. 7 Moreover, they have also shown themselves to be a generational force, incapable of breaking out of their diminishing base of elderly supporters. The Communists therefore face the prospect of terminal decline. The Socialists have also declined (from 8.7 to 6.93 per cent), and another left-wing party which did well in 1998, the Greens, failed to secure any seats at all. These trends present a paradox. Were votes translated into seats, the left would have done better than it did. Yet even so, the current parliament, as Taras Kuzio has noted, would be less left-wing than any parliament preceding it. 8 The Technology of Elections More than a month before the elections took place, three-quarters of Ukrainian citizens were convinced that they would be fraudulent. 9 How widespread were violations of Ukrainian law and international norms? How significantly did they affect the result? How significantly were the results influenced by other factors manipulation, guile and the political culture of the country? The first question is easy to answer. Violations were widespread. Observers of Our Ukraine registered 10,000 violations at polling stations, including bogus counts, destroyed ballot papers, electoral tourism and in at least one Donetsk polling station, a violent assault upon election observers. More significant were attempts to suborn members of constituency election commissions, along with the dearth of polling stations in western regions and in at least one oblast, Ivano-Frankivsk, the failure of polling stations to 3

5 4 James Sherr open. Observers of the Committee of Voters of Ukraine filed 100,000 such complaints. Yet perhaps more indicative is the verdict of its head, Ihor Popov: Voting is proceeding normally, better than in The verdict of Yulia Tymoshenko is that vote rigging occurred on a much smaller scale than that planned by the authorities. 11 According to the All-Ukrainian Monitoring Committee, the difference between exit polls and the results declared by the Central Election Commission was below two per cent. Nevertheless, the discrepancy between voter preferences and single-seat mandates is another story. To be sure, the polling stations in which citizens voted for party lists were the same as those in which they voted for single candidates, and the constituency electoral commissions which counted the votes were also the same. Violations would have impacted on both lists, and in several eastern oblasti, there are signs that they did. Yet as was noted by the International Election Observer Mission (IEOM), international observers can only obtain copies of protocols for the proportional party list contest at the DEC [District/Constituency Election Commission] level [and] the law also fails to provide clearly for the publication of detailed results. This suggests that the single-seat results were easier to falsify than the party list results. 12 Therefore, the second question is more difficult to answer than the first. Irregularities of the sort monitored by short-term observers had very limited effect on party lists and a greater impact on single-seat lists. Deficiencies in rules and procedures also had an impact. The third question is still more difficult to answer, yet it gets to the heart of the matter. It is the institutionalisation of state power more than vote rigging which explains the discrepancy between voter preferences and results. Yet state dominance of the media, the factor assigned greatest prominence by the IEOM and other Western dominated bodies, might not explain as much as these observers suppose. Ukrainians are as sceptical about their news media as they are about their authorities. Viktor Medvedchuk s control of two leading television channels, Inter and 1+1, did not put him in a position of strength. State dominance and state bias are part of the furniture. They cannot explain why ZaEdU s rating went up from 6 to 12 per cent in the fortnight before the election. For this, one not only needs media influence, but issues that can be exploited. One issue which was exploited was foreign influence. But there is no small irony in this. US Senate Resolution 205 Urging the Government of Ukraine to Ensure a Democratic, Transparent and Fair Election not only undermined Yushchenko, its pro-presidential potential was first grasped by Russian technologists. 13 Wittingly or otherwise, this campaign benefited from an unlikely source of assistance, Charles Clover, Financial Times correspondent in Ukraine, whose documentary recycling claims connecting American policymakers and US geopolitical interests to the tape scandals, was broadcast twice on the pro-presidential channel ICTV during the campaign. 14 It also benefited from the fact that senior figures in the President s Administration, and possibly the President himself, believe that these claims

6 Ukraine's Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation are true. 15 The foreign influence campaign had resonance amongst the electorate. According to a March poll of the Razumkov Centre, 25.7 per cent of voters believed that the United States was exercising serious influence on the campaign, whereas only 15.5 per cent saw the hand of Moscow as strong. Zerkalo Nedeli believes that this perception might have cost Yushchenko as much as one-sixth of his support. 16 Other active measures (eg the suspiciously timed rehabilitation of SS veterans in Ivano- Frankivsk) might have been intended to have similar effects. But the real influence of the state is both more blatant and more insidious than these examples suggest. The Institutionalisation of Power Were there no democracy in Ukraine, the composition of the current parliament, let alone the heavily left-wing parliament which preceded it, would be inexplicable. Nevertheless, Ukraine is a new and flawed democracy with an inbred, opaque and authoritarian administrative culture. It is these well embedded, structural features, rather than any particular set of measures or practices, which exerted the greatest influence on the singleseat results. Any citizen of the United Kingdom will immediately realise that Ukraine is not unique in attracting the charge that the first-past-the-post system is undemocratic. In both countries, the winner of a constituency takes all, and hence a party which secures 49% of the national vote without winning a single constituency will not win a single seat either. For this reason, defenders of the Ukrainian system the President s Administration first and foremost could argue that it is more democratic than Britain s, because at least in Ukraine, half of the 450 seats are elected by PR on a nationwide party list system. But life itself would refute this argument very swiftly in Ukraine. This is because heads of regional state administration have enormous power, and they are appointed by the President. 17 It is also because at local, at least as much as at national levels, the executive and judicial bodies the Ministry of Interior and police, State Tax Administration, State Property Fund, Antimonopoly Committee, Directorate for Struggle against Organised Crime, State Committee on Television and Radio Broadcasting and courts are accustomed to serve the state rather than the public, are unaccustomed to public scrutiny and are spared the burdens of public accountability. 18 Finally, it is because the closed and collusive relationship between business and politics extends into most spheres of administration and, with rude unpredictability, encroaches upon the private domains of ordinary people. In these conditions, it is likely that the better known candidates will have the backing of the authorities and that administrative resources will keep them well ahead of the pack. This is exactly what happened. Although Yushchenko s bloc did far better in the single-mandate contest than expected, the distribution of its seats (70 from party lists, 41 single-mandate) 5

7 James Sherr is virtually the reverse of that secured by ZaEdU (36 and 66 seats, respectively). 19 The same facts suggest why the large number of independents elected (93) are unlikely to be independent of the authorities in practice. What Future for Parliament? As it is in many countries with multiple parties and complex electoral systems, so it is in Ukraine: the elections are only half the contest. It may take weeks, possibly months, before negotiation, manoeuvre and pressure produce a parliament with a definite configuration, not to say character. Moreover, its first configuration is unlikely to be its last. The elections of March 1998 produced a decidedly left-wing parliament, yet within weeks of Kuchma s re-election as President in November 1999, it produced a majority supporting his decidedly right-of-centre Prime Minister, Viktor Yushchenko; as the President gradually withdrew support from his Prime Minister in summer/winter 2000, the same parliament found many reasons to obstruct him, and on 26 April 2001, it removed him from power. In this respect, Ukraine is unlike most other European countries. The electoral system and the powers who stand behind it explain why this is so. They would also suggest that ideology could prove less important in the new parliament than two other factors. The first of these is the fact that the state is the most powerful source of patronage in the country. The second is that the Rada is a well placed reservoir of clients. Amongst political analysts, the conventional wisdom is that many independents are for sale, and in Ukraine as well as in Russia, the same is true for many Communists. But the more interesting question is how many members of the 10 parties making up Our Ukraine will be unable to resist advice from on high and quit the Yushchenko faction. 20 That large numbers of Trojan horses are already in place is more likely than not. When the protagonists are cautious about making predictions, analysts must be twice as cautious. Yuliya Tymoshenko believes that a coalition of Batkivshchyna, the Socialists and Our Ukraine would form the nucleus of a majority which would force the dismissal of the government team. 21 But that is neither a coherent programme, nor a coherent force except for the first two parties, for whom the removal of the President as well as the government has become an end in itself. For Viktor Yushchenko, these are not ends in themselves, and his heterogeneous bloc would almost certainly break up if he now decided that they were. Moreover, although Yushchenko is a convinced democrat who has been literally driven mad by the authorities, 22 he is also an economist and technocrat, who recognises that there are some moderately reformist figures in ZaEdU and who knows that Ukraine could have far worse prime ministers than the cautious but very competent Anatoliy Kinakh. Nevertheless, a coalition with ZaEdU would also be trying for the unity of Our Ukraine; it could be impossible if the former did not cut ties with Medvedchuk (whose relationship with Yushchenko 6

8 Ukraine's Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation comes close to enmity), and it is far from certain that ZaEdU would be prepared to accept such a coalition on anything but its own terms. Although ZaEdU and the Communists are of similar mind about the indispensably of economic cooperation with Russia and similarly inclined about the desirability of advancing into Europe with Russia Ukraine s state leadership is committed to close cooperation with NATO (which is anathema to the Communists), and most members of that leadership recognise that alliance with the Communists would doom Ukraine s prospects in Europe. Perilous as predictions are, the result is more likely to be a parliament of floating, ad hoc coalitions than an entity with a fixed configuration. What Future for Ukraine? The results of Ukraine s parliamentary elections reveal three complex truths and one significant uncertainty. The first complex truth is that the elections were characterised by widespread manipulation but also an improvement in standards. In part this improvement was due to the ineffectiveness of the authorities, in part to prudence, but in part to restraint. The administrative resource was vigorously employed, but outside three or four regions, it was employed within definite parameters. By comparison with decent standards and not only Western ones, much of this technology was improper; to those who experienced it, most of it was degrading and some of it frightening. But by comparison with Ukraine s previous elections the presidential elections of October/November 1999 and the parliamentary elections of 1998, not to say the blatantly rigged referendum of April 2000 the results were positive. By comparison with the Russian Federation (whose elections inexplicably receive less exacting scrutiny than Ukraine s), the contrasts are not unfavourable, and by comparison with Belarus, they are dramatic, particularly when one takes into account the plurality of interests and viewpoints which exist and express themselves in Ukraine. The second complex truth is that regional discrepancies are both dramatic and receding. As Oleksandr Sushko has noted, the administrative resources failed completely in Lviv in Donetsk they were nearly 100 per cent effective. Yet as he also notes, the 2002 election campaign [was] characterised by the significant decrease [in] popularity of the purely Soviet ideology and traditional nationalism the main factors outlining the eastern and western types of electoral sympathies. 23 The transformation of a largely borderland party, Rukh, into a diverse national bloc with pluralities extending to the Russian border substantiates this judgement in ample measure. The third such truth is that civil society is not only becoming a factor in Ukraine, but in the Marxist sense, becoming conscious of itself: participating not so much in the established order as against it. Although this civil society remains very much a minority of society, it is no longer confined to intellectuals, but has a mass base. Honhadze s murder and the tape scandals seem to have been a watershed in this respect. Whilst at one 7

9 James Sherr level the growth of civic instincts is sharpening the divide between state and society, it is also creating points of friction within the state and hence, a dynamic of evolution inside it. This movement from below not only presents a challenge to the authorities, but to the political establishment of Yushchenko s moderately radical party which in classical Ukrainian fashion believes that making deals is more important than picking quarrels. 24 Therefore, the significant uncertainty is the future. The fourth convocation of the Rada is the most positive of these uncertainties. To some extent parliament is bound to be a larder of patronage and favouritism, but it is also likely to play a role in its own right, both energising and conciliating. The far greater uncertainty is the President, his entourage and the executive power structures which they control. The authorities misjudged the sentiment of society and the strength of it. What conclusions will they draw from this realisation between now and the holding of presidential elections in October/November 2004? Will they view Donetsk as a testing ground for the most brutal administrative technologies 25 or will they (pace Lenin) realise that it is no longer possible to rule in the old way? Will they be open to advice from the Euro-Atlantic institutions with which, once again, they seek to integrate? Will those who offer advice be precise in their criticisms and balance criticism with praise? Will these Western mentors avoid double standards in their comments and actions and, through these actions, overturn the conviction that the West is closed to Ukraine? The twilight of the Kuchma era will be a challenge for the West as well as for Ukraine. ENDNOTES 1 In a recent television debate on 1+1 TV with Viktor Medvedchuk (head of the United Social Democratic Party, loyal to the President), Moroz declared: I was a member of the Communist Party for 17 years, and I am not ashamed of a single day that I spent in that capacity. I defended the idea of social justice and when the banner of the leftist idea was dropped, my associates and I did not let it fall down. It was a period of nationalist hysteria. On the other hand, there were attempts to sever good ties with neighbours, primarily Russia Cited in BBC Summary of World Broadcasts: Former Soviet Union [hereafter SWB], 21 March Perhaps not coincidentally, the abbreviation of Za Edinnuyu Ukrainu ( For a United Ukraine ), ZaEdU has the merit of meaning for food! (za edu!) 3 As noted by Ivan Lozowy just prior to the release of the final official count. A case in points was the Winter Crop Generation, portrayed as a group of progressive, centre-right politicians and entrepreneurs. They are coming in at only 1.98 per cent of the vote, despite massive support on national television: repeated participation in televised debates, interviews with group leaders, dozens of ads per day. Another notorious clone, Bohdan Boyko s splinter Rukh party, fooled virtually no one, receiving but 0.16 per cent. Ivan Lozowy, Item A: Democracy Factor Wins, The Ukraine Insider, Vol 2, No 9, 2 April The April Fools poll, scrupulously conducted by the Razumkov Centre, provides a revealing indicator of public sentiment. In answer to the question, for whom would you vote as President of Ukraine? the responses were: Yushchenko 27.4 per cent, Putin [President of Russia] 2.7 per cent, Medvedchuk 8.3 per cent, Vitrenko 5.6 per cent, Kuchma 3.7 per cent, Alyaksandr Lukashenka [President of Belarus]) 3.7 per cent, George Bush 2.3 per cent, Mikhail Gorbachev 1.2 per cent [author s emphasis]. In Every Joke [V kazhdoy shutke ], Zerkalo Nedeli, 29 March The new election law, which came into effect on 18 October 2001, is perceived by the OSCE as a major advance towards European standards of even-handedness and 8

10 Ukraine's Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation transparency. As noted in the Preliminary Report of the International Election Observer Mission, [a] major innovation in the new Election Law is the formation of multi-party District (Constituency) and Polling Station Election Commissions, including proportional distribution of leadership positions to participating parties. Accountability of election commissions and the transparency of their work was improved by detailing the rights of international observers and party representatives, especially the right to observe all stages of the election process. 6 According to Article 133 of the Constitution, Kyiv and Sevastopol have a special status. 7 The Communists secured a plurality in eight eastern and southern oblasti, as well as the city of Sevastopol (which has a special status) and the Autonomous Republic of Crimea. ZaEdU and the Socialists secured a plurality in one oblast each, Donetsk and Poltava respectively. 8 Even in the Convocation, the Communists held 80 seats. Taras Kuzio, Ukraine Takes Two Steps Forward, One Step Back (RFE/RL Newsline, Vol 6, No 64, Part II, 5 April 2002). 9 Poll conducted by Socis and the Democratic Initiatives Foundation, 1-7 February. Moreover, 61 per cent believed that the outcome will in no way improve the situation. SWB, 21 February Ukrainian news agency UNIAN, SWB, 31 March Her bloc estimates that 950,000 ballot papers were dismissed as invalid. Nevertheless, she concluded, we believe that the election should be deemed valid. But there needs to be a considerable revision of the votes share by the parties and blocs on a legal basis : a conclusion which, despite the qualification, possibly reflects the fact that she did better than expected. Novyy Kanal TV, 15 April 2002 (SWB). 12 The IEOM also noted that the pro-presidential bloc "For a United Ukraine", with 17 per cent of DEC members and 7 per cent of single mandate candidates, obtained 43 per cent of DEC chairs. With the addition of chairpersons from other pro-presidential parties, with 34 per cent of DEC members, 70 per cent of the chairs were considered to be close to the current administration. By contrast, "Our Ukraine" with 20.5 per cent of all DEC members, held only 9 per cent of the chairs. (International Election Observation Mission 2002, Elections to the Verkhovna Rada of Ukraine: Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions, 1 April 2002.) 13 Indication of their tendentious knowledge of Ukraine is Pavlovskiy s characterisation of Yushchenko s support as subsidised backward regions. Oleksandr Sushko, A Split Country Election Technology, Ukrainian Monitor (Centre for Peace, Conversion and Foreign Policy of Ukraine, Weekly Issue No 14/2002, 1-7 April 2002, p7). 14 Charles Clover appears in the credits as Producer (with John Cooper), Reporter and Writer (with John Cooper). Although Myroslava Honhadze, widow of murdered journalist Heorhiy Honhadze, stated that the film and the sequence of facts in it is structured in such a way as to suit, I believe, the authors and those who ordered this film, the author is unaware of the identity of those who commissioned the film and does not know whether Clover intended it to be shown on Ukrainian television (narrated on ICTV in American accented English with a Russian voice-over). PR should not be confused with the BBC film, Killing the Story (narrated by Tom Mangold and broadcast on Correspondent on 21 April 2002). (Interview with STB TV, 12 April 2002, SWB.) 15 As Taras Kuzio has noted, [d]uring the last two years, Russophile oligarch clans and their media outlets in Ukraine have increasingly given credence to a Brzezinski plan conspiracy that was first aired by Russian sources close to President Vladimir Putin. The Brzezinski plan is supposedly an elaborate plan concocted by a group of US policymakers to overthrow President Kuchma and replace him with Yushchenko in a "bloodless revolution. Russia Gives Ukraine a Helping Hand in its Elections, RFE/RL Newsline, Vol 6, No 13, Part II, 22 January For an appraisal of the contrast between Russian and Western influence in the elections, see James Sherr, Ukraine s Elections and its Future Relationship with the West, National Security and Defence (Ukrainian Centre for Economic and Political Studies. 16 Zerkalo Nedeli, op cit. 9

11 James Sherr 17 In Chapter V ( President of Ukraine ) of the Constitution, Article 106, Para 10 states that the President appoints the heads of local state administrations and terminates their authority in these positions. 18 This fact is accorded oblique legitimacy in Chapter XI ( Local Self-Government ), surely one of the most Delphic in the Constitution. Article 143 states: Bodies of local selfgovernment, on issues of their exercise of powers of bodies of executive power, are under the control of the respective bodies of executive power. This begs the question of what these powers are and who defines them: clearly not the local authorities. In other words, the centre holds real power at the local level. 19 Nearly all parliamentary parties won a higher percentage of seats in the party list than the percentage of votes they received. This apparently puzzling result is explained by the fact that only 10 of the 33 parties certified by the Central Election Commission cleared the 4 per cent barrier, and the remaining votes were reapportioned. 20 Website of Ukrayinska Pravda, 4 April 2002, cited in SWB. 21 According to Article 85 Paragraph 12 of the Constitution, the Verkhovna Rada is authorised to give consent to the appointment of the Prime Minister of Ukraine by the President of Ukraine. 22 Oleksandr Vyshnyak, Director, Ukrainian Sociology Service, cited in Ukrainian Monitor, op cit, p5. 23 Ibid, p7. 24 Rostyslav Khotin, Myths of the Ukrainian Election, 4 April 2002, BBC World News website ( 25 Ukrainian Monitor, 8-14 April 2002, p5. 10

12 Ukraine's Parliamentary Elections: The Limits of Manipulation ANNEX: ACTUAL RESULTS & PR OUTCOME (1) (2) (3) (4) (5) % Vote PR Single Total PR Seats 1 Seats Seats Outcome Our Ukraine (Yushchenko) Communists (Symonenko) For a United Ukraine (Lytvyn) Motherland (Tymoshenko) Socialists (Moroz) USDP (Medvedchuk) Unity Democratic Union (Horbulin) Ukrainian Naval Party Party of Natl Econ Development NA Independents Other parties Unaccounted for * The PR outcome assumes: (1) a pure PR system with one nation-wide party list; (2) a strict 4% threshold; (2) votes for parties falling below the threshold (24.09% of votes cast) proportionately reallocated to parties that cleared it. 1 Because other parties falling below the 4 per cent barrier secured per cent, their votes were proportionately donated to parties which secured seats. Under the election rules, these were treated as lost votes. Hence, the totals in Column 2 are greater than the percentages which each party secured. 2 Although there are 450 seats in the Rada, the official totals come to

13 Disclaimer The views expressed are those of the Author and not necessarily those of the UK Ministry of Defence ISBN

14 Published By: The Conflict Studies Research Centre Royal Military Academy Sandhurst Camberley Telephone : (44) Surrey Or GU15 4PQ Fax : (44) England csrc@defenceacademy.mod.uk ISBN

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC RFE/RL Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine Report Vol. 5, No. 7, 25 February 2003 A Survey of Developments in Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine by the Regional

More information

ISSUE: 230. Wisdom begins in wonder. - Socrates. Vacuums, Reforms and the Need to Regain the Initiative By Taras Kuzio

ISSUE: 230. Wisdom begins in wonder. - Socrates. Vacuums, Reforms and the Need to Regain the Initiative By Taras Kuzio ISSUE: 230 Wisdom begins in wonder. - Socrates DIALOGUE AND DEBATE Subscribe Vacuums, Reforms and the Need to Regain the Initiative By Taras Kuzio The events that came to be known worldwide as the "Orange

More information

Crimean stable instability and outcomes of the crimean by-elections

Crimean stable instability and outcomes of the crimean by-elections Crimean stable instability and outcomes of the crimean by-elections No. 35/283, October 7, 2002 Yulia Tyshchenko, Head of Civil Society Programs During the by-elections to the Verkhovna Rada of the Autonomous

More information

As fickle as the recent moves of Yushchenko and his party may look, they highlight Our Ukraine's deep-seated motivations.

As fickle as the recent moves of Yushchenko and his party may look, they highlight Our Ukraine's deep-seated motivations. TRANSITIONS ONLINE: Yushchenko: Constructing an Opposition by Taras Kuzio 11 August 2006 As fickle as the recent moves of Yushchenko and his party may look, they highlight Our Ukraine's deep-seated motivations.

More information

Conflict Studies Research Centre

Conflict Studies Research Centre Conflict Studies Research Centre Central & Eastern Europe Series 04/26 Into Reverse? The Dismissal of Ukraine's Minister of Defence James Sherr Key Points * Defence Minister Marchuk was closely identified

More information

POST-ELECTION INTERIM REPORT 29 October 6 November November 2012

POST-ELECTION INTERIM REPORT 29 October 6 November November 2012 OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights Election Observation Mission Ukraine Parliamentary Elections, 28 October 2012 I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY POST-ELECTION INTERIM REPORT 29 October 6 November

More information

Category: OPINION 01 Aug 2002, KYIV POST. Autonomist sentiment stirring in western Ukraine Taras Kuzio

Category: OPINION 01 Aug 2002, KYIV POST. Autonomist sentiment stirring in western Ukraine Taras Kuzio Category: OPINION 01 Aug 2002, KYIV POST Autonomist sentiment stirring in western Ukraine Taras Kuzio The political, economic and cultural stagnation of the second half of Leonid Kuchma's second term is

More information

Electoral harvest time in Kyiv

Electoral harvest time in Kyiv Electoral harvest time in Kyiv No 8/256, February 25, 2002 In the election time, some rather specific things that happen in Kyiv may surprise not only outside observers, but also local analysts who look

More information

Olexiy Haran POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN INDEPENDENT UKRAINE

Olexiy Haran POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN INDEPENDENT UKRAINE Olexiy Haran POLITICS AND SOCIETY IN INDEPENDENT UKRAINE UNDERSTANDING UKRAINE Until recently Ukraine was to a great extent terra incognita for the West. The history of Ukraine was distorted by Soviet

More information

The Duma Districts Key to Putin s Power

The Duma Districts Key to Putin s Power The Duma Districts Key to Putin s Power PONARS Policy Memo 290 Henry E. Hale Indiana University and Robert Orttung American University September 2003 When politicians hit the campaign trail and Russians

More information

STATEMENT OF PRELIMINARY FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS

STATEMENT OF PRELIMINARY FINDINGS AND CONCLUSIONS NATO Parliamentary Assembly Assemblée parlementaire de l OTAN INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVATION MISSION Presidential Election (Second Round), Ukraine 21 November 2004 STATEMENT OF PRELIMINARY FINDINGS

More information

UKRAINE: PRE-TERM PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS SEPTEMBER Report by Aadne Aasland

UKRAINE: PRE-TERM PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS SEPTEMBER Report by Aadne Aasland UKRAINE: PRE-TERM PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS SEPTEMBER 2007 Report by Aadne Aasland NORDEM Report 8/2007 Copyright: the Norwegian Centre for Human Rights/NORDEM and Aadne Aasland. NORDEM, the Norwegian Resource

More information

Convergence in Post-Soviet Political Systems?

Convergence in Post-Soviet Political Systems? Convergence in Post-Soviet Political Systems? A Comparative Analysis of Russian, Kazakh, and Ukrainian Parliamentary Elections PONARS Eurasia Policy Memo No. 36 Nikolay Petrov Carnegie Moscow Center August

More information

Ukraine after the March 2006 Parliamentary Elections: Quo Vadis?

Ukraine after the March 2006 Parliamentary Elections: Quo Vadis? Elena Kropatcheva Ukraine after the March 2006 Parliamentary Elections: Quo Vadis? Introduction Located in Eastern Europe on the Black Sea, bordered by Poland, Romania, and Moldova in the west and Russia

More information

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT OF THE NDI INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVER DELEGATION TO UKRAINE'S DECEMBER 26, 2004 REPEAT OF THE PRESIDENTIAL RUNOFF ELECTION

PRELIMINARY STATEMENT OF THE NDI INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVER DELEGATION TO UKRAINE'S DECEMBER 26, 2004 REPEAT OF THE PRESIDENTIAL RUNOFF ELECTION PRELIMINARY STATEMENT OF THE NDI INTERNATIONAL ELECTION OBSERVER DELEGATION TO UKRAINE'S DECEMBER 26, 2004 REPEAT OF THE PRESIDENTIAL RUNOFF ELECTION Kyiv, December 27, 2004 This preliminary statement

More information

Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition. by Charles Hauss. Chapter 9: Russia

Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition. by Charles Hauss. Chapter 9: Russia Comparative Politics: Domestic Responses to Global Challenges, Seventh Edition by Charles Hauss Chapter 9: Russia Learning Objectives After studying this chapter, students should be able to: describe

More information

STATEMENT OF THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE: ENVIRONMENT FAVORABLE FOR A DEMOCRATIC ELECTION IN MOST OF UKRAINE Ukraine, May 19, 2014

STATEMENT OF THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE: ENVIRONMENT FAVORABLE FOR A DEMOCRATIC ELECTION IN MOST OF UKRAINE Ukraine, May 19, 2014 STATEMENT OF THE NATIONAL DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTE: ENVIRONMENT FAVORABLE FOR A DEMOCRATIC ELECTION IN MOST OF UKRAINE Ukraine, May 19, 2014 The May 25 elections are the most important in Ukraine s independent

More information

Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights UKRAINE. EARLY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 25 May 2014

Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights UKRAINE. EARLY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 25 May 2014 Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights UKRAINE EARLY PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 25 May 2014 OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission Final Report Warsaw 30 June 2014 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. EXECUTIVE

More information

RUSSIAN INFORMATION AND PROPAGANDA WAR: SOME METHODS AND FORMS TO COUNTERACT AUTHOR: DR.VOLODYMYR OGRYSKO

RUSSIAN INFORMATION AND PROPAGANDA WAR: SOME METHODS AND FORMS TO COUNTERACT AUTHOR: DR.VOLODYMYR OGRYSKO RUSSIAN INFORMATION AND PROPAGANDA WAR: SOME METHODS AND FORMS TO COUNTERACT AUTHOR: DR.VOLODYMYR OGRYSKO PREPARED BY THE NATO STRATEGIC COMMUNICATIONS CENTRE OF EXCELLENCE Russia s aggression against

More information

RUSSIA AND EURASIA REVIEW: A journal of information and analysis

RUSSIA AND EURASIA REVIEW: A journal of information and analysis Tuesday, 4 February 2003 - Russia and Eurasia Review, Volume 2, Issue 3 RUSSIA AND EURASIA REVIEW: A journal of information and analysis Census: Ukraine, more Ukrainian By Taras Kuzio CENSUS: UKRAINE,

More information

SIPU report for the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA) Under contract Advisory Services for EU Ukraine, Sida ref: 2007.

SIPU report for the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA) Under contract Advisory Services for EU Ukraine, Sida ref: 2007. SIPU report for the Swedish International Development Agency (SIDA) Under contract Advisory Services for EU Ukraine, Sida ref: 2007.002743 Date: 30 April 2008 REF: SIPU/JMWEN ASS. 04-rev5 Authors: Nathaniel

More information

Patterns of illiberalism in central Europe

Patterns of illiberalism in central Europe Anton Shekhovtsov, Slawomir Sierakowski Patterns of illiberalism in central Europe A conversation with Anton Shekhovtsov Published 22 February 2016 Original in English First published in Wirtualna Polska,

More information

THE INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTE

THE INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTE Election Observation Report: Ukraine s 2007 Parliamentary Elections THE INTERNATIONAL REPUBLICAN INSTITUTE ADVANCING DEMOCRACY WORLDWIDE UKRAINE PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS SEPTEMBER 30, 2007 (202) 408-9450

More information

The first 100 Days after Change of Power in Ukraine: Authoritarian Tendencies and Rapprochement with Russia

The first 100 Days after Change of Power in Ukraine: Authoritarian Tendencies and Rapprochement with Russia COUNTRY REPORT The first 100 Days after Change of Power in Ukraine: Authoritarian Tendencies and Rapprochement with Russia Within the first weeks after Viktor Yanukovych's victory in the presidential elections,

More information

info@democracy-reporting.org www.democracy-reporting.org Referendums are becoming increasingly prevalent in Europe. In 2016 alone, the Prime Ministers of Italy and the UK resigned after losing referendums.

More information

From the CIS to the SES A New Integrationist Game in Post-Soviet Space

From the CIS to the SES A New Integrationist Game in Post-Soviet Space From the CIS to the SES A New Integrationist Game in Post-Soviet Space PONARS Policy Memo 303 Oleksandr Sushko Center for Peace, Conversion and Foreign Policy of Ukraine November 2003 On September 19,

More information

Orange Revolution: Origins, Successes and Failures of Democratic Transformation Dr. Olexiy Haran, Petro Burkovsky

Orange Revolution: Origins, Successes and Failures of Democratic Transformation Dr. Olexiy Haran, Petro Burkovsky Friedrich-Naumann-Stiftung Imprint: Published by Friedrich-Naumann-Foundation Liberal Institute Truman-Haus Karl-Marx-Straße 2 D-14482 Potsdam Phone +49 (3 31) 70 19-210 Fax +49 (3 31) 70 19-216 libinst@fnst.org

More information

The 2014 elections to the European Parliament: towards truly European elections?

The 2014 elections to the European Parliament: towards truly European elections? ARI ARI 17/2014 19 March 2014 The 2014 elections to the European Parliament: towards truly European elections? Daniel Ruiz de Garibay PhD candidate at the Department of Politics and International Relations

More information

PERSONAL INTRODUCTION

PERSONAL INTRODUCTION Forum: Issue: Student Officer: Position: Legal Committee The Referendum Status of Crimea Leen Al Saadi Chair PERSONAL INTRODUCTION Distinguished delegates, My name is Leen Al Saadi and it is my great pleasure

More information

Year That Changed Ukraine

Year That Changed Ukraine CONFRONTATION AND COOPERATION 1000 YEARS OF POLISH GERMAN RUSSIAN REL ATIONS V o l. I I / 2 0 1 5 : 5 4 5 9 DOI: 10.1515/conc-2015-0013 Iryna Bekeshkina Democratic Initiatives Foundation, Kiev, Ukraine

More information

Ukrainian Teeter-Totter VICES AND VIRTUES OF A NEOPATRIMONIAL DEMOCRACY

Ukrainian Teeter-Totter VICES AND VIRTUES OF A NEOPATRIMONIAL DEMOCRACY Ukrainian Teeter-Totter VICES AND VIRTUES OF A NEOPATRIMONIAL DEMOCRACY PONARS Eurasia Policy Memo No. 120 Oleksandr Fisun Kharkiv National University Introduction A successful, consolidated democracy

More information

Part Three (continued): Electoral Systems & Linkage Institutions

Part Three (continued): Electoral Systems & Linkage Institutions Part Three (continued): Electoral Systems & Linkage Institutions Our political institutions work remarkably well. They are designed to clang against each other. The noise is democracy at work. -- Michael

More information

Power as Patronage: Russian Parties and Russian Democracy. Regina Smyth February 2000 PONARS Policy Memo 106 Pennsylvania State University

Power as Patronage: Russian Parties and Russian Democracy. Regina Smyth February 2000 PONARS Policy Memo 106 Pennsylvania State University Power as Patronage: Russian Parties and Russian Democracy Regina February 2000 PONARS Policy Memo 106 Pennsylvania State University "These elections are not about issues, they are about power." During

More information

Igor Ivanov on Iraq and the Struggle for a New World Order Dr Mark A Smith Key Points of Russian Foreign Policy Unlike the Kosovo campaign and 11 Sept

Igor Ivanov on Iraq and the Struggle for a New World Order Dr Mark A Smith Key Points of Russian Foreign Policy Unlike the Kosovo campaign and 11 Sept Conflict Studies Research Centre Igor Ivanov on Iraq and the Struggle for a New World Order Dr Mark A Smith Key Points of Russian Foreign Policy Unlike the Kosovo campaign and 11 September 2001, the Iraq

More information

REMAPPING UKRAINE 15 th Century BCE to 21 st Century CE. Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Vanderbilt University Winter Term 2015 Mary Pat Silveira

REMAPPING UKRAINE 15 th Century BCE to 21 st Century CE. Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Vanderbilt University Winter Term 2015 Mary Pat Silveira REMAPPING UKRAINE 15 th Century BCE to 21 st Century CE Osher Lifelong Learning Institute Vanderbilt University Winter Term 2015 Mary Pat Silveira MEET THE PLAYERS Before the Orange Revolution Leonid Kravchuk

More information

Crimea from playground to battleground

Crimea from playground to battleground Crimea from playground to battleground Taras Kuzio [1] 27 February 2014 Journalistic speculation about Crimea becoming independent is rife. However, the real dangers lie elsewhere On 27 February the Crimean

More information

Russia's Political Parties. By: Ahnaf, Jamie, Mobasher, David X. Montes

Russia's Political Parties. By: Ahnaf, Jamie, Mobasher, David X. Montes Russia's Political Parties By: Ahnaf, Jamie, Mobasher, David X. Montes Brief History of the "Evolution" of Russian Political Parties -In 1991 the Commonwealth of Independent States was established and

More information

Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights UKRAINE. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 31 October, 21 November and 26 December 2004

Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights UKRAINE. PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 31 October, 21 November and 26 December 2004 ODIHR.GAL/33/05 11 May 2005 ENGLISH only Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights UKRAINE PRESIDENTIAL ELECTION 31 October, 21 November and 26 December 2004 OSCE/ODIHR Election Observation Mission

More information

Ukraine and Russia: Two Countries One Transformation 1

Ukraine and Russia: Two Countries One Transformation 1 Ukraine and Russia: Two Countries One Transformation 1 Gerhard Simon 2 Introduction and background Ukraine made a significant contribution to the fall of the USSR. Without Ukraine, it was inconceivable

More information

EXPERT INTERVIEW Issue #2

EXPERT INTERVIEW Issue #2 March 2017 EXPERT INTERVIEW Issue #2 French Elections 2017 Interview with Journalist Régis Genté Interview by Joseph Larsen, GIP Analyst We underestimate how strongly [Marine] Le Pen is supported within

More information

GCE AS 2 Student Guidance Government & Politics. Course Companion Unit AS 2: The British Political System. For first teaching from September 2008

GCE AS 2 Student Guidance Government & Politics. Course Companion Unit AS 2: The British Political System. For first teaching from September 2008 GCE AS 2 Student Guidance Government & Politics Course Companion Unit AS 2: The British Political System For first teaching from September 2008 For first award of AS Level in Summer 2009 For first award

More information

The EU-Ukraine Action Plan on Visa Liberalisation: an assessment of Ukraine s readiness

The EU-Ukraine Action Plan on Visa Liberalisation: an assessment of Ukraine s readiness oswcommentary i s s u e 4 5 1 7. 0 1. 2 0 1 1 c e n t r e f o r e a s t e r n s t u d i e s The EU-Ukraine Action Plan on Visa Liberalisation: an assessment of Ukraine s readiness Marta Jaroszewicz The

More information

What Hinders Reform in Ukraine?

What Hinders Reform in Ukraine? What Hinders Reform in Ukraine? PONARS Eurasia Policy Memo No. 166 September 2011 Robert W. Orttung The George Washington University Twenty years after gaining independence, Ukraine has a poor record in

More information

Hungary. Basic facts The development of the quality of democracy in Hungary. The overall quality of democracy

Hungary. Basic facts The development of the quality of democracy in Hungary. The overall quality of democracy Hungary Basic facts 2007 Population 10 055 780 GDP p.c. (US$) 13 713 Human development rank 43 Age of democracy in years (Polity) 17 Type of democracy Electoral system Party system Parliamentary Mixed:

More information

International Perspective on Representation Japan s August 2009 Parliamentary Elections By Pauline Lejeune with Rob Richie

International Perspective on Representation Japan s August 2009 Parliamentary Elections By Pauline Lejeune with Rob Richie International Perspective on Representation Japan s August 2009 Parliamentary Elections By Pauline Lejeune with Rob Richie The Japanese parliamentary elections in August 30, 2009 marked a turning point

More information

THREE EASTERN PARTNERSHIP NEIGHBOURS: UKRAINE, MOLDOVA AND BELARUS

THREE EASTERN PARTNERSHIP NEIGHBOURS: UKRAINE, MOLDOVA AND BELARUS THREE EASTERN PARTNERSHIP NEIGHBOURS: UKRAINE, MOLDOVA AND BELARUS The EU s Eastern Partnership policy, inaugurated in 2009, covers six post-soviet states: Armenia, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Georgia, Moldova

More information

November 11, 2005 A DIFFICULT BALANCE: UKRAINE BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE EU. Inna Pidluska Europe XXI Foundation Kyiv, Ukraine

November 11, 2005 A DIFFICULT BALANCE: UKRAINE BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE EU. Inna Pidluska Europe XXI Foundation Kyiv, Ukraine November 11, 2005 A DIFFICULT BALANCE: UKRAINE BETWEEN RUSSIA AND THE EU Inna Pidluska Europe XXI Foundation Kyiv, Ukraine In 1963 a Ukrainian historian Ivan Lysnyak-Rudnytsky spoke at a congress of historians

More information

Electoral Sentiment Monitoring in Ukraine

Electoral Sentiment Monitoring in Ukraine Electoral Sentiment Monitoring in Ukraine November 2018 Methodology o The study was conducted by three companies: Kyiv International Institute of Sociology, the Ukrainian Centre for Economic and Political

More information

EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW (VENICE COMMISSION) AND OSCE/OFFICE FOR DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS (OSCE/ODIHR)

EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW (VENICE COMMISSION) AND OSCE/OFFICE FOR DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS (OSCE/ODIHR) Strasbourg, 17 June 2013 Opinion No. 727/2013 CDL-AD(2013)016 Or. Engl. EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW (VENICE COMMISSION) AND OSCE/OFFICE FOR DEMOCRATIC INSTITUTIONS AND HUMAN RIGHTS (OSCE/ODIHR)

More information

Ukraine Between a Multivector Foreign Policy and Euro- Atlantic Integration

Ukraine Between a Multivector Foreign Policy and Euro- Atlantic Integration Ukraine Between a Multivector Foreign Policy and Euro- Atlantic Integration Has It Made Its Choice? PONARS Policy Memo No. 426 Arkady Moshes Finnish Institute of International Affairs December 2006 The

More information

The European Union played a significant role in the Ukraine

The European Union played a significant role in the Ukraine Tracing the origins of the Ukraine crisis: Should the EU share the blame? The EU didn t create the Ukraine crisis, but it must take responsibility for ending it. Alyona Getmanchuk traces the origins of

More information

UKRAINE LAW ON THE RULES OF PROCEDURE OF THE VERKHOVNA RADA OF UKRAINE

UKRAINE LAW ON THE RULES OF PROCEDURE OF THE VERKHOVNA RADA OF UKRAINE Strasbourg, 07 September 2017 Opinion No. 885/ 2017 CDL-REF(2017)037 Engl.Only EUROPEAN COMMISSION FOR DEMOCRACY THROUGH LAW (VENICE COMMISSION) UKRAINE LAW ON THE RULES OF PROCEDURE OF THE VERKHOVNA RADA

More information

COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE

COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE 01135, Kyiv-135, а/с 5 phone/fax: (044) 490-61-34 E- mail: cvu@cvu.kiev.ua October 21, 2004 PRECINCT ELECTION COMMISSIONS GROSSLY UNPREPARED TO ADMINISTER THE ELECTION AUDIT

More information

COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE LONG TERM OBSERVATION REPORT ON THE 2002 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS FEBRUARY 1 22, 2002

COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE LONG TERM OBSERVATION REPORT ON THE 2002 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS FEBRUARY 1 22, 2002 COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE LONG TERM OBSERVATION REPORT ON THE 2002 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS FEBRUARY 1 22, 2002 SUMMARY In October 2001, the Committee of Voters of Ukraine (CVU) began its long-term

More information

National Exit Poll: 2014 Parliamentary Elections. Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation

National Exit Poll: 2014 Parliamentary Elections. Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation National Exit Poll: 2014 Parliamentary Elections Ilko Kucheriv Democratic Initiatives Foundation CONTENTS INTRODUCTION Iryna BEKESHKINA INTRODUCTION Section 1 Iryna FILIPCHUK FOURTEEN EXIT POLLS IN ELECTIONS

More information

COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE LONG TERM OBSERVATION REPORT ON THE 2002 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS JANUARY 2002

COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE LONG TERM OBSERVATION REPORT ON THE 2002 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS JANUARY 2002 COMMITTEE OF VOTERS OF UKRAINE LONG TERM OBSERVATION REPORT ON THE 2002 PARLIAMENTARY ELECTIONS JANUARY 2002 SUMMARY In October 2001, the Committee of Voters of Ukraine (CVU) began its long-term observation

More information

BRIEFING PAPER 6 12 June 2006 MAKING A DIFFERENCE WHY AND HOW EUROPE SHOULD INCREASE ITS ENGAGEMENT IN UKRAINE. Arkady Moshes

BRIEFING PAPER 6 12 June 2006 MAKING A DIFFERENCE WHY AND HOW EUROPE SHOULD INCREASE ITS ENGAGEMENT IN UKRAINE. Arkady Moshes BRIEFING PAPER 6 12 June 2006 MAKING A DIFFERENCE WHY AND HOW EUROPE SHOULD INCREASE ITS ENGAGEMENT IN UKRAINE Arkady Moshes Finnish Institute of International Affairs UPI Executive summary The fate of

More information

EXAM: Parties & Elections

EXAM: Parties & Elections AP Government EXAM: Parties & Elections Mr. Messinger INSTRUCTIONS: Mark all answers on your Scantron. Do not write on the test. Good luck!! 1. All of the following are true of the Electoral College system

More information

F2PTP A VOTING SYSTEM FOR EQUALITY OF REPRESENTATION IN A MULTI-PARTY STATE FIRST TWO PAST THE POST. 1 Tuesday, 05 May 2015 David Allen

F2PTP A VOTING SYSTEM FOR EQUALITY OF REPRESENTATION IN A MULTI-PARTY STATE FIRST TWO PAST THE POST. 1 Tuesday, 05 May 2015 David Allen A VOTING SYSTEM FOR EQUALITY OF REPRESENTATION IN A MULTI-PARTY STATE 1 Tuesday, 05 May 2015 David Allen TIME FOR CHANGE In 2010, 29,687,604 people voted. The Conservatives received 10,703,654, the Labour

More information

ONTARIO SUPERIOR COURT OF JUSTICE. JOAN RUSSOW and THE GREEN PARTY OF CANADA. - and -

ONTARIO SUPERIOR COURT OF JUSTICE. JOAN RUSSOW and THE GREEN PARTY OF CANADA. - and - ONTARIO SUPERIOR COURT OF JUSTICE File No.: B E T W E E N: JOAN RUSSOW and THE GREEN PARTY OF CANADA Applicants - and - THE ATTORNEY GENERAL OF CANADA, THE CHIEF ELECTORAL OFFICER OF CANADA and HER MAJESTY

More information

Partisan Advantage and Competitiveness in Illinois Redistricting

Partisan Advantage and Competitiveness in Illinois Redistricting Partisan Advantage and Competitiveness in Illinois Redistricting An Updated and Expanded Look By: Cynthia Canary & Kent Redfield June 2015 Using data from the 2014 legislative elections and digging deeper

More information

BRIEFING PAPER 14 4 December 2007 A COLLAPSING FAÇADE? Sinikukka Saari

BRIEFING PAPER 14 4 December 2007 A COLLAPSING FAÇADE? Sinikukka Saari BRIEFING PAPER 14 4 December 2007 A COLLAPSING FAÇADE? The Russian Duma Election in Perspective Sinikukka Saari The Duma election and its results reinforce the prevailing undemocratic trends in Russia.

More information

Conflict Studies Research Centre

Conflict Studies Research Centre Conflict Studies Research Centre Another Ukrainian Minister of Defence James Sherr This brief sets out the factors which Ukrainians believe influenced the appointment of Yevhen Marchuk as Defence Minister.

More information

Russian Political Parties. Bryan, George, Jason, Tahzib

Russian Political Parties. Bryan, George, Jason, Tahzib Russian Political Parties Bryan, George, Jason, Tahzib United Russia Founded in 2001 with the merging of the Fatherland All-Russia Party and the Unity Party of Russia. Currently holds 238 seats in the

More information

Nataliya Nechayeva-Yuriychuk. Department of Political Science & Public Administration. Yuriy Fed kovych Chernivtsi National University

Nataliya Nechayeva-Yuriychuk. Department of Political Science & Public Administration. Yuriy Fed kovych Chernivtsi National University Nataliya Nechayeva-Yuriychuk Department of Political Science & Public Administration Yuriy Fed kovych Chernivtsi National University August, 24, 1991 proclaiming of independence of Ukraine December 1,

More information

BTI 2014 Ukraine Country Report

BTI 2014 Ukraine Country Report BTI 2014 Ukraine Country Report Status Index 1-10 5.89 # 57 of 129 Political Transformation 1-10 6.10 # 58 of 129 Economic Transformation 1-10 5.68 # 62 of 129 Management Index 1-10 4.26 # 87 of 129 scale

More information

Reading the local runes:

Reading the local runes: Reading the local runes: What the 2011 council elections suggest for the next general election By Paul Hunter Reading the local runes: What the 2011 council elections suggest for the next general election

More information

ANNUAL SURVEY REPORT: REGIONAL OVERVIEW

ANNUAL SURVEY REPORT: REGIONAL OVERVIEW ANNUAL SURVEY REPORT: REGIONAL OVERVIEW 2nd Wave (Spring 2017) OPEN Neighbourhood Communicating for a stronger partnership: connecting with citizens across the Eastern Neighbourhood June 2017 TABLE OF

More information

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC. A Survey of Developments in Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine by the

RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC. A Survey of Developments in Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine by the RADIO FREE EUROPE/RADIO LIBERTY, PRAGUE, CZECH REPUBLIC RFE/RL Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine Report Vol. 5, No. 4, 4 February 2003 A Survey of Developments in Poland, Belarus, and Ukraine by the Regional

More information

THE 2015 REFERENDUM IN POLAND. Maciej Hartliński Institute of Political Science University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn

THE 2015 REFERENDUM IN POLAND. Maciej Hartliński Institute of Political Science University of Warmia and Mazury in Olsztyn East European Quarterly Vol. 43, No. 2-3, pp. 235-242, June-September 2015 Central European University 2015 ISSN: 0012-8449 (print) 2469-4827 (online) THE 2015 REFERENDUM IN POLAND Maciej Hartliński Institute

More information

THE LAW OF UKRAINE On Election of the People s Deputies of Ukraine 1. Chapter I. GENERAL PROVISIONS

THE LAW OF UKRAINE On Election of the People s Deputies of Ukraine 1. Chapter I. GENERAL PROVISIONS THE LAW OF UKRAINE On Election of the People s Deputies of Ukraine 1 Chapter I. GENERAL PROVISIONS Article 1. Basic Principles of Elections of Members of Parliament of Ukraine 1. The People s Deputies

More information

Maintaining Control. Putin s Strategy for Holding Power Past 2008

Maintaining Control. Putin s Strategy for Holding Power Past 2008 Maintaining Control Putin s Strategy for Holding Power Past 2008 PONARS Policy Memo No. 397 Regina Smyth Pennsylvania State University December 2005 There is little question that Vladimir Putin s Kremlin

More information

INTERIM REPORT 26 October 14 November November 2011

INTERIM REPORT 26 October 14 November November 2011 OSCE Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights Election Observation Mission Russian Federation Parliamentary Elections, 4 December 2011 INTERIM REPORT 26 October 14 November 2011 21 November

More information

Elections and Voting Behaviour. The Political System of the United Kingdom

Elections and Voting Behaviour. The Political System of the United Kingdom Elections and Behaviour The Political System of the United Kingdom Intro Theories of Behaviour in the UK The Political System of the United Kingdom Elections/ (1/25) Current Events The Political System

More information

Ukraine s Integration in the Euro-Atlantic Community Way Ahead

Ukraine s Integration in the Euro-Atlantic Community Way Ahead By Gintė Damušis Ukraine s Integration in the Euro-Atlantic Community Way Ahead Since joining NATO and the EU, Lithuania has initiated a new foreign policy agenda for advancing and supporting democracy

More information

SECURITY COUNCIL Topic C: Deciding upon Measures to Stabilize the Ukrainian Territory

SECURITY COUNCIL Topic C: Deciding upon Measures to Stabilize the Ukrainian Territory SECURITY COUNCIL Topic C: Deciding upon Measures to Stabilize the Ukrainian Territory Chair Elen Bianca Souza Vice-Chair Camila Rocha SALMUN 2014 1 INDEX Background Information. 3 Timeline. 8 Key Terms...10

More information

What Has Changed in Ukrainian Politics?

What Has Changed in Ukrainian Politics? What Has Changed in Ukrainian Politics? Assessing the Implications of the Orange Revolution Paul D Anieri The Orange Revolution did not solve all of Ukraine s political problems. Changing leaders is not

More information

New Zealand Germany 2013

New Zealand Germany 2013 There is a budding campaign to change the UK electoral system from a First Past the Post system (FPTP) to one that is based on Proportional Representation (PR) 1. The campaign makes many valid points.

More information

BRIEFING NOTE TO MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT: TWO YEARS OF RUSSIA S WAR AGAINST UKRAINE

BRIEFING NOTE TO MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT: TWO YEARS OF RUSSIA S WAR AGAINST UKRAINE BRIEFING NOTE TO MEMBERS OF PARLIAMENT: TWO YEARS OF RUSSIA S WAR AGAINST UKRAINE February 25, 2016 National Office: 130 Albert Street, Suite 806 Ottawa ON K1P 5G4 Canada Tel: (613) 232-8822 Fax: (613)

More information

ASSESSMENT OF THE LAWS ON PARLIAMENTARY AND PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA (FRY)

ASSESSMENT OF THE LAWS ON PARLIAMENTARY AND PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA (FRY) Office for Democratic Institutions and Human Rights ASSESSMENT OF THE LAWS ON PARLIAMENTARY AND PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS IN THE REPUBLIC OF SERBIA (FRY) Warsaw 26 April 2001 TABLE OF CONTENTS I. SUMMARY...

More information

International Election Observation Mission. Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions

International Election Observation Mission. Statement of Preliminary Findings and Conclusions Republic of Latvia Parliamentary Election 5 October 2002 International Election Observation Mission Riga, 6 October 2002 The International Election Observation Mission for the 5 October 2002 elections

More information

Impact of electoral systems on women s representation in politics

Impact of electoral systems on women s representation in politics Declassified (*) AS/Ega (2009) 32 rev 8 September 2009 aegadoc32rev_2009 Impact of electoral systems on women s representation in politics Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men Rapporteur:

More information

STATE PROGRAM On Strengthening Gender Equality in Ukrainian Society until 2010

STATE PROGRAM On Strengthening Gender Equality in Ukrainian Society until 2010 APPROVED BY Resolution of the Cabinet of Ministers of Ukraine No. 1834 of 27 December 2006 STATE PROGRAM On Strengthening Gender Equality in Ukrainian Society until 2010 54 GENERAL PROVISIONS Equality

More information

The EU and Russia: our joint political challenge

The EU and Russia: our joint political challenge The EU and Russia: our joint political challenge Speech by Peter Mandelson Bologna, 20 April 2007 Summary In this speech, EU Trade Commissioner Peter Mandelson argues that the EU-Russia relationship contains

More information

ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR CHAPTER 10, Government in America

ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR CHAPTER 10, Government in America ELECTIONS AND VOTING BEHAVIOR CHAPTER 10, Government in America Page 1 of 6 I. HOW AMERICAN ELECTIONS WORK A. Elections serve many important functions in American society, including legitimizing the actions

More information

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ON POLITICAL PARTY AND CAMPAIGN FINANCING. APPENDIX No. 1. Matrix for collection of information on normative frameworks

COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ON POLITICAL PARTY AND CAMPAIGN FINANCING. APPENDIX No. 1. Matrix for collection of information on normative frameworks COMPARATIVE ANALYSIS ON POLITICAL PARTY AND CAMPAIGN FINANCING APPENDIX No. 1 Matrix for collection of information on normative frameworks NAME OF COUNTRY AND NATIONAL RESEARCHER ST LUCIA CYNTHIA BARROW-GILES

More information

REGULATIONS OF THE CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES Content Chapter I - Organisation of the Chamber of Deputies Establishment of the Chamber of Deputies

REGULATIONS OF THE CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES Content Chapter I - Organisation of the Chamber of Deputies Establishment of the Chamber of Deputies REGULATIONS OF THE CHAMBER OF DEPUTIES Content Chapter I - Organisation of the Chamber of Deputies Section 1 - Section 2 - Section 3 - Section 4 - Section 5 - Establishment of the Chamber of Deputies Parliamentary

More information

A New Electoral System for a New Century. Eric Stevens

A New Electoral System for a New Century. Eric Stevens A New Electoral System for a New Century Eric There are many difficulties we face as a nation concerning public policy, but of these difficulties the most pressing is the need for the reform of the electoral

More information

PES Roadmap toward 2019

PES Roadmap toward 2019 PES Roadmap toward 2019 Adopted by the PES Congress Introduction Who we are The Party of European Socialists (PES) is the second largest political party in the European Union and is the most coherent and

More information

Kuchmagate and the Ukrainian Diaspora The Ukrainian Weekly 23 and 30 December 2000

Kuchmagate and the Ukrainian Diaspora The Ukrainian Weekly 23 and 30 December 2000 Kuchmagate and the Ukrainian Diaspora The Ukrainian Weekly 23 and 30 December 2000 Recent events should force us to sober up to the fact that nearly a decade after Ukraine became an independent state that

More information

Resource Manual on Electoral Systems in Nepal

Resource Manual on Electoral Systems in Nepal Translation: Resource Manual on Electoral Systems in Nepal Election Commission Kantipath, Kathmandu This English-from-Nepali translation of the original booklet is provided by NDI/Nepal. For additional

More information

Vote-Buying and Selling

Vote-Buying and Selling The Political Economy of Elections in Uganda: Vote-Buying and Selling Presented during The National Conference on Religion Rights and Peace convened by Human Rights and Peace Centre (HURIPEC) School of

More information

INTRODUCTION THE MEANING OF PARTY

INTRODUCTION THE MEANING OF PARTY C HAPTER OVERVIEW INTRODUCTION Although political parties may not be highly regarded by all, many observers of politics agree that political parties are central to representative government because they

More information

COUNTRY INFORMATION BULLETIN

COUNTRY INFORMATION BULLETIN COUNTRY INFORMATION BULLETIN Serbia & Montenegro (Republic of Serbia) 1/2004 Introduction 1.1 This Bulletin has been produced by the Country Information and Policy Unit, Immigration and Nationality Directorate,

More information

AP Comparative Government

AP Comparative Government AP Comparative Government The Economy In 1991, Mikhail Gorbachev enacted the perestroika reforms This consisted of market economy programs inserted into the traditional centralized state ownership design

More information

LAW ON THE REFERENDUM ON STATE-LEGAL STATUS OF THE REPUBLIC OF MONTENEGRO I BASIC PROVISIONS

LAW ON THE REFERENDUM ON STATE-LEGAL STATUS OF THE REPUBLIC OF MONTENEGRO I BASIC PROVISIONS Print LAW ON THE REFERENDUM ON STATE-LEGAL STATUS OF THE REPUBLIC OF MONTENEGRO I BASIC PROVISIONS Article 1 The present law shall regulate: the calling for the referendum on state-legal status of the

More information

The Fair Sex in an Unfair System

The Fair Sex in an Unfair System The Fair Sex in an Unfair System The Gendered Effects of Putin s Political Reforms PONARS Policy Memo No. 398 Valerie Sperling Clark University December 2005 In September 2004, in the aftermath of the

More information

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN RESEARCH

THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN RESEARCH TITLE: The Status of Russia's Trade Unions AUTHOR: Linda J. Cook THE NATIONAL COUNCIL FOR SOVIET AND EAST EUROPEAN RESEARCH 1755 Massachusetts Avenue, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20036 PROJECT INFORMATION:*

More information

EXPLAINING POLITICAL SURPRISES (AKA MAKING METHODOLOGY FUN): DETERMINANTS OF VOTING IN UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS

EXPLAINING POLITICAL SURPRISES (AKA MAKING METHODOLOGY FUN): DETERMINANTS OF VOTING IN UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS EXPLAINING POLITICAL SURPRISES (AKA MAKING METHODOLOGY FUN): DETERMINANTS OF VOTING IN UKRAINIAN PRESIDENTIAL ELECTIONS Florin N Fesnic Center for the Study of Democracy, Babeş-Bolyai University Cluj,

More information

ELECTIONS IN RUSSIA BACK TO THE FUTURE OR FORWARD TO THE PAST?

ELECTIONS IN RUSSIA BACK TO THE FUTURE OR FORWARD TO THE PAST? EUISS RUSSIA TASK FORCE MEETING II REPORT Sabine FISCHER ELECTIONS IN RUSSIA BACK TO THE FUTURE OR FORWARD TO THE PAST? EU Institute for Security Studies, Paris, 18 th January 2008 Russia s long-awaited

More information